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The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3 July 2008
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The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

The Corpus and the language learner

Mike Scott,

School of English

University of Liverpool

Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute

University of Liverpool

3 July 2008

Page 2: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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Is Corpus Linguistics the Answer?

No, only a helpful TOOL

Page 3: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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Questions

What is useful to the language learner? What is useful to the language teacher? What are the learners’ biggest & most urgent

problems? What pitfalls do learners experience? Does it make much difference whether

they’re beginners, intermediate or advanced? How could corpora help? How could corpus tools help?

Page 4: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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Problems Early CALL programs

were pedagogically awful pseudo-intelligent

Page 5: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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Problems

patronising (“would you like to try again?”) “you scored 5 in 14 seconds” (I know the

answer but you are thick)

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Pattern Grammar

V n n bring him lunch write me a letter

V n adj prefer the fish unfilleted wished both of them dead

V n –ing hates me being a businesswoman don’t like them pointing at me

Francis, Hunston & Manning (1996) Cobuild Grammar: Verbs

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Pattern Grammar V n to-inf

hates his wife to stand out in a crowd nagged me to cut my hair

V n inf bade her go to the Dauphin felt something touch his knee

V n that told me he’d planned to be away warned her that I might not last out

V n wh asked another what was wrong showed him how the gas cooker works

Francis, Hunston & Manning (1996) Cobuild Grammar: Verbs

Page 8: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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Each pattern has a few meaning-types

V n inf SEE group

he noticed a figure detach itself …; it’s hard to watch youth slip away; saw arrears rise to record levels

LET group have him recommend a club that …;let others live in safety;

make her commit herself to the group HELP group

can help you make your choice

Page 9: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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… and grammatical restrictions V n inf 1 both the noun group and the infinitive clause are

objects 2 dislikes passivisation:

no passive for have, notice & watch (*he was had recommend a club; *she was noticed arrive; *we were watched swim)

most of the verbs have no exact passive equivalent (*a figure was seen detach itself) though in the case of let we get his few opponents can safely be let go)

Page 10: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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Learning Patterns

“a learner may know that the verb promise can be used in two patterns: V that, as in I promised I would have a word …, and V n that, as in He promised them that he’d change the way … The learner may also know other verbs that have a similar meaning to promise, such as assure, tell and warn …the learner’s knowledge about promise can be extended to warn but not to assure and tell” (Cobuild 1996:xv).

Page 11: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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Learning Patterns

The question arises: how do native speakers know that you can say I promised I would have a word but not *I assured he would come soon or *I told Mary would do it?

And how can ELT teachers teach this … Or learners learn it????

Page 12: The Corpus and the language learner Mike Scott, School of English University of Liverpool Corpus Linguistics Summer Institute University of Liverpool 3.

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Data-driven learning

Tim Johns

http://www.eisu2.bham.ac.uk/johnstf/def_art.htm

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Tim Johns’ Kibbitzers

http://www.eisu2.bham.ac.uk/johnstf/timeap3.htm#revision

Check out: incessant v. steadfast (K1) K25 : Topic v. subject and what can act as

subject for argues.

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Hadley (2003)

http://www.nuis.ac.jp/~hadley/publication/jlearner/jlearner.htm

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Mahlberg (2006)

dots are words meriting concordancing etc. “the students take the points as starting-points for a

concordance analysis”

2006:379

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Römer (2006)

DDL exercise: What is the missing word – speak or talk?

I can only ------- for myself; I can’t -------- for you of course.

Are you able to ------- English fluently?

And then at the end we’ll -------- it through.

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Römer (2006)

However, she also discusses, usefully, 3.2 The Indirect Approach

(teachers’/textbook writers’ use of corpora) and

4. a CL and LT wish list better corpora e.g. spoken corpora, corpora of real use

v. textbook use easier tools corpus-based coursebooks

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Gavioli & Aston (2001)

CL has helped produce better descriptions of English, avoiding misapprehensions…

…but there seem to be no principles for selecting items (real, Dutch, tend to) to correct using corpora: “while corpora do not tell us what to teach, they can help us make better-informed decisions” (p. 239)

Examples of DDL in action (pp. 241, 242)

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Timmis (2005)

Argues for pedagogically sound materials reflecting sociolinguistic concerns: they should be available for listening interesting “plausible as natural interaction” (p. 118)

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Timmis (2005)

Proposes ELT materials e.g. using video on life in Cornwall, focussing on Heads: All my friends down there, we went to

school together Tails: They demand breakfast, the children Ellipsis: Business booming, is it? Vague language: That’s where the smugglers

and that used to keep the loot etc.

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Key words and the language learner…

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Activities (1)

supply KWs and predict/guess at the text

rationale: boosts confidence & reduces tension of reading the text; variant on old un-pedagogical supplying of a glossary prior to reading

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Activities (2)

sort KWs into categories (people, places, processes etc.)

rationale: leads to Critical Reading: what was said and what was downplayed and what omitted

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Activities (3)

Predict which other text-types would typically contain those KWs

rationale: focus on notion of the colony, text-types, intertextuality

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Activities (4)

KWs as a basis for writing tasks

rationale: students start from their own KWs and generate a text; reduces tension of writing a well-formed text, provides a basis for brain-storming

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Activities (5)

KWs as a basis for oral presentations

rationale: helps prepare the audience, prior to or immediately following outline summary of the presentation; helps focus the presenter’s mind towards the audience (away from the teacher) and increase likelihood of awareness of difficulties audience might face, as well as focus on the essential as opposed to incidental

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Activities (6)

Read/listen and note down the KWs

rationale: preparation for note-taking but less stressful

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Conclusions

After a poor start, CALL has now, through DDL, a chance of helping students to learn.

Pattern Grammar has emerged from the CL initiative and helps explain language better than traditional models.

A number of imaginative methods of getting this through to students are being tried out.

There is still a l-o-n-g way to go!

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Collins Cobuild, 1996, Grammar Patterns 1: Verbs. Gavioli, Laura & Guy Aston, 2001. “Enriching reality: language corpora in

language pedagogy”. English Language Teaching Journal, Vol. 55, No. 3. pp. 238-246.

Hadley, Greg, 2003 : http://www.nuis.ac.jp/~hadley/publication/jlearner/jlearner.htm

Johns, Tim, 1994. "From printout to handout: Grammar and vocabulary teaching in the context of Data-driven Learning." In T. Odlin, ed., Perspectives on Pedagogical Grammar. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Mahlberg, Michaela, 2006, “Lexical Cohesion: Corpus Linguistic Theory and its application to English Language Teaching”. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics, Vol. 11, No. 3, 363-383.

Römer, Ute, 2006. “Pedagogical Applications of Corpora: some reflections on the current scope and a wish list for future developments”. Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik 54 (2): 121-134.

Timmis, Ivor, 2005. “Towards a framework for teaching spoken grammar”. English Language Teaching Journal, Vol. 59, No. 2. pp.117-125.

References